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The Hull Daily Mail is an English regional daily newspaper for Kingston upon Hull, in the East Riding of Yorkshire. The Hull Daily Mail has been circulated in various guises since 1885. A second edition, the East Riding Mail, covers East Yorkshire outside the city of Hull. The paper publishes everyday except Sunday.
Bradford Star (1981-2000) [1]; Harrogate Herald (1847–1957), pub. Robert Ackrill. [2]Hull Portfolio, radical newspaper of James Acland, founded c.1831.; The Hull Packet and East Riding Times [3] / The Hull Packet Humber Mercury or Yorkshire and Lincolnshire Advertiser [4] / Yorkshire Advertiser
Daily Mail: Daily 745,629 1896 Ted Verity: Daily Mail and General Trust plc: Conservative Party: The Mail on Sunday: Sundays 637,877 1982 David Dillon: Daily Express: Daily 163,610 1900 Gary Jones: Reach: Sunday Express: Sundays 163,610 1918 Michael Booker Daily Mirror: Daily 258,043 1903 Lloyd Embley: Centre-left: Labour Party: Sunday Mirror ...
The Hull Daily Mail of 31 August 1914 carried Nunburnholme's proposal to raise a 'Commercial Battalion' from men working in business offices in Hull who would serve alongside their friends. Recruitment opened the following day at Wenlock Barracks on Anlaby Road , loaned by the ERTFA, and 200 men were attested on the first day.
The Labour Party won control of Hull Corporation in 1934. [1] In the same year the Municipal Association was established 'to combat socialist domination', advertising against 'socialist (mis)rule'. [ 1 ] [ 2 ] The Association grew out of the former "Independent Group", [ 3 ] and included both Liberals and Conservatives . [ 4 ]
Yorkshire portal; Hull Daily Mail is within the scope of WikiProject Yorkshire, an attempt to build a comprehensive and detailed guide to Yorkshire on Wikipedia. If you would like to participate, you can visit the project page, where you can join the project, see a list of open tasks, and join in discussions on the project's talk page.
Dinsdale grew up in Kingston upon Hull, and attended Hull Technical College, before joining the Hull Daily Mail as a reporter, in 1926. He then moved into sub-editing, working at the Newcastle Evening World, Manchester Evening News, Daily Express, Evening News and the Daily Mirror, then for the War Service during World War II.
The Hull Daily Mail, echoed, "To many of extreme religious views, his profession was anathema". [64] In a 1910 lecture, which included a couple of Maskelyne's illusions, Morton said that the Protestant Church still took too prejudiced a view against the stage. Considering the greater temptations he did not consider actors any worse than others.